- Aug 10, 2001
- 10,420
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You flip a coin n times.  The probabilty of getting a head on any flip is p.  What is the probability that after every flip the total number of heads flipped up to that point is greater than the total number of tails flipped up to that point?
if n=1, the only possibility is H
if n=2, the only possibility is HH
if n=3, the two possibilities are HHH or HHT
if n=4, the three possibilites are HHHH, HHHT, or HHTH
if n=5, the six possibilites are HHHHH, HHHHT, HHHTT, HHHTH, HHTHH, and HHTHT
Of course you could keep doing this until you notice a pattern, take a guess at the formula, and then try to prove that forumula by induction. (I tried that approach, but didn't get anywhere). But there must be something you can condition on to simply the problem. I'm stumped.
			
			if n=1, the only possibility is H
if n=2, the only possibility is HH
if n=3, the two possibilities are HHH or HHT
if n=4, the three possibilites are HHHH, HHHT, or HHTH
if n=5, the six possibilites are HHHHH, HHHHT, HHHTT, HHHTH, HHTHH, and HHTHT
Of course you could keep doing this until you notice a pattern, take a guess at the formula, and then try to prove that forumula by induction. (I tried that approach, but didn't get anywhere). But there must be something you can condition on to simply the problem. I'm stumped.
 
				
		 
			 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		
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